Entity Dossier
Company

Lumeris

Strategic Concepts & Mechanics

Primary Evidence

"Our CEO, Mike Long, engaged with a lunch group and said, “Why would anybody want to work in an environment with a fear of holding each other accountable?” That was a powerful inflection point, and people began to believe. But culture change can be very personal. It took one conversation at a time to convince our employees that collaboration, shared accountability, and transparency would be rewarded. And to show they had nothing to fear from the new Lumeris."

Source:Measure What Matters

"People watch what you do more than what you say. Lumeris had some senior leaders with an old-school, autocratic approach. They weren’t living our core values: ownership, accountability, passion for the job, loyalty to the team. Nothing else would matter until those leaders exited the organization. We made sure they left us with their dignity and respect intact, a telling moment in any transformation project."

Source:Measure What Matters

"Shortly after arriving, Art held a full-day, off-site business review for the Lumeris leadership team. Now it’s on the company’s monthly calendar. When our top-line OKRs are projected on a screen, it’s clear to see which leaders are making their objectives. Art doesn’t like yellows, so every OKR is either green (on track) or red (at risk). There’s no bell-curve ambiguity, no place for problems to hide. The reviews run for three hours, with a dozen senior executives taking their turn. Little time is spent on people’s greens. Instead, they “sell” their reds. The team votes on the most important at-risk OKRs for the company as a whole, then brainstorms together as long as it takes to get the objectives back on track. In the spirit of cross-departmental solidarity, individuals volunteer to “buy” their colleagues’ reds."

Source:Measure What Matters

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